Below are the updated quarterly traffic rankings by page views of the Top 50 blogs edited by law professors for 2013 (Jan. 1, 2013 - Dec. 31, 2013), as well as the percentage change in traffic from the prior 12-month period. As I previously announced, in response to several requests and in light of the continued degrading of Site Meter, I am now including the more accurate, stable Google Analytics data in these quarterly traffic rankings (marked with an asterisk).

The rankings include all blogs edited by law professors -- both law-related and non law-related.

The rankings include all blogs that have publicly available Site Meters or that have emailed me a screenshot of their Google Analytics data (or granted me read-only access to their data).

Please email me the names of any Law Prof Blogs with traffic in 2013 that would qualify for inclusion on the list (130,795 page views). If necessary, I will re-publish the list to include all qualifying blogs.

Several popular Law Prof Blogs do not have publicly available Site Meters and have not sent me Google Analytics data and thus are not included on the list: e.g., California Appellate Report, Credit Slips, The Deal Professor, Feminist Law Professors, Legal Theory, PatentlyO, Point of Law, ProfessorBainbridge.com.

These rankings cover only those blogs edited by law professors. Other law-related blogs edited by practitioners, librarians, non-law school academics, and journalists are not included on this list: e.g., Above the Law, How Appealing, Wall Street Journal Law Blog.

Comments

You guys better be careful posting this. Extreme traffic inequality. Some liberal law professor who has an unread blog might insist on the fairness doctrine, or forced redistribution of traffic.

Posted by: Andy Fox | Apr 14, 2014 6:09:54 AM

No doubt Legal Insurrection benefited greatly from its excellent coverage of the Florida v. Zimmerman trial. Also, an honorary mention to Above The Law, even though it's not managed by a law professor.

Posted by: Adam | Apr 14, 2014 6:55:35 AM

VC went down probably because lots of us won't click onto the Wapo. I miss Eugene, but ...